The head of the stockbroking firm founded by Australia’s highest-profile insider trader – the late Rene Rivkin – has warned the current $7 million trading scandal is just the tip of the iceberg

Trading ‘tip of iceberg’

May 13, 2014

Patrick Durkin and Ben Butler

The head of the stockbroking firm founded by Australia’s highest-profile insider trader – the late Rene Rivkin – has warned the current $7 million trading scandal is just the tip of the iceberg. Read more of this post

The head of the Italian eyewear maker Luxottica has a fresh and international perspective

THE MONDAY INTERVIEW

May 11, 2014 3:59 pm

An eye on the future of luxury 

By Rachel Sanderson

The head of the Italian eyewear maker has a fresh and international perspective

©Alessia Pierdomenico

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Say one thing to say something else: Frame a debate by implying some point is so obvious that it can be taken as given

THE ART OF PERSUASION

May 12, 2014 4:05 pm

Say one thing to say something else

By Sam Leith

Frame a debate by implying some point is so obvious that it can be taken as given

Lord Myners, a former financial services minister, was interviewed on BBC Radio 4’s Today Programme last Wednesday morning. He was talking as his report into the – ahem – suboptimal governance of the Co-operative Group was about to be published, and setting out what he thought should happen. Read more of this post

Brain science fires up the neurons of managers; Neuroscientists are in demand for their insights into business

May 12, 2014 3:42 pm

Brain science fires up the neurons of managers

By Alicia Clegg

Neuroscientists are in demand for their insights into business

Every day David Amodio comes face to face with prejudice − not in the form of insults and put-downs – but as hotspots and squiggles on PC screens depicting the brain behaviour of people shown pictures of strangers from other racial groups. Read more of this post

Who Trades Against Mispricing?

Who Trades Against Mispricing?

Mariassunta Giannetti 

Stockholm School of Economics; Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR); European Corporate Governance Institute (ECGI); Swedish House of Finance

Bige Kahraman 

Stockholm School of Economics – Department of Finance; Swedish House of Finance
April 1, 2014
Swedish House of Finance Research Paper No. 14-09

Abstract:       Read more of this post

Top banking jobs are turning into hot seats; Top banking jobs are turning into hot seats

May 12, 2014 5:03 pm

Top banking jobs are turning into hot seats

By Martin Arnold

High levels of litigation risk is making it hard to fill top posts

Pity the poor headhunters. Finding people to lead some of the world’s biggest banks is harder than most people think. Read more of this post

‘We do not need 80% of active management’

May 11, 2014 7:22 am

‘We do not need 80% of active management’

By Michael Johnson

Recently, robust, independent and damning evidence emerged that skewers any justification that active fund management of listed assets is worth the candle. For dispassionate observers, it has been long overdue, but the source was unexpected: the UK’s Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG). Read more of this post

Tech Stocks Are Still ‘Too Silly’ for Some; Valuations of Young Tech Companies Remain Sky-High

Tech Stocks Are Still ‘Too Silly’ for Some

Valuations of Young Tech Companies Remain Sky-High

STEVEN RUSSOLILLO and MATT JARZEMSKY

May 11, 2014 4:23 p.m. ET

Young technology-company stocks fell out of favor in the blink of an eye. But their valuations remain sky-high and many investors say they have a lot more room to decline before bouncing back. Steven Russolillo joins MoneyBeat. Photo: AP. Read more of this post

Takeaways from the Berkshire Hathaway AGM 2014 and the Pearl River Delta (PRD) Trip

image006

“Bamboo Innovators bend, not break, even in the most terrifying storm that would snap the mighty resisting oak tree. It survives, therefore it conquers.”

BAMBOO LETTER UPDATE | May 19, 2014
Bamboo Innovator Insight (Issue 34)
 

Dear Friends and All,

 

Takeaways from the Berkshire Hathaway AGM 2014 and the Pearl River Delta (PRD) Trip

 

Q: “How does management factor into valuing intrinsic value?”

Read more of this post

History of Law and Economics

History of Law and Economics

Martin Gelter 

Fordham University School of Law; European Corporate Governance Institute (ECGI)

Kristoffel R. Grechenig 

Max-Planck-Institute for Research on Collective Goods
April 1, 2014
MPI Collective Goods Preprint, No. 2014/5

Abstract: 
The roots of law & economics lie in late 19th century continental Europe. However, this early movement did not persist, having been cut off in the 1930s. After World War II, modern law & economics was (re-)invented in the United States and subsequently grew into a major field of research at U.S. law schools. In continental Europe, law & economics was re-imported as a discipline within economics, driven by economists interested in legal issues rather than by legal scholars. Hence, the European discourse was more strongly influenced by formal analysis, using mathematical models. Today, research in the U.S., Europe, and in other countries around the world, including Latin America and Asia, uses formal, empirical, and intuitive methods. New subfields, such as behavioral law & economics and experimental law & economics, have grown in the U.S. and in Europe during the past two decades.

Overvaluing the ‘Undervalued’ View of the Yuan; The Chinese currency has no real ‘equilibrium value,’ even if Treasury wishes it did

Overvaluing the ‘Undervalued’ View of the Yuan

The Chinese currency has no real ‘equilibrium value,’ even if Treasury wishes it did.

MARK A. DEWEAVER

May 11, 2014 5:38 p.m. ET

Since Jan. 1 the yuan has fallen 2.9% against the dollar, reversing the Chinese currency’s 2.9% appreciation in 2013. Such a dip would be a small fluctuation for a freely traded currency, but it’s a big drop in China. The yuan hasn’t fallen so much or for so long since July 2005, when Beijing introduced what it calls “a managed floating exchange rate based on market supply and demand with reference to a basket of currencies.” Read more of this post

Chinese tycoon Liu Han testified in court that he owed a chunk of his fortune to deal-making with government officials more than a decade ago, shedding light on a corruption probe that has roiled the highest echelons of power in China.

Tycoon Liu Han Testifies on Past State-Brokered Deals in Sichuan Province

Transcript Offers Rare Look at How Investments Were Allegedly Structured

JAMES T. AREDDY

May 8, 2014 12:24 p.m. ET

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Don’t Be Evil.or Creepy: Earning-and Keeping-Trust in a Transparent World

May 12, 2014, 11:01 AM ET

Don’t Be Evil…or Creepy: Earning—and Keeping—Trust in a Transparent World

By Malcolm Frank,

Our world is rapidly digitizing, creating new economic opportunity and redefining the boundaries of privacy. Read more of this post

What’s in a Name? The Art of Addressing Chinese Officials

May 12, 2014

What’s in a Name? The Art of Addressing Chinese Officials

By Yiyi Lu

Long gone are the good old days when everyone simply called one another “comrade,” and no other titles were necessary. Read more of this post

Why Banks at Wal-Mart Are Among America’s Top Fee Collectors; Branches Woo Customers Other Banks Spurned; Racking Up Overdrafts

Why Banks at Wal-Mart Are Among America’s Top Fee Collectors

Branches Woo Customers Other Banks Spurned; Racking Up Overdrafts

MARK MAREMONT and TOM MCGINTY

May 11, 2014 10:38 p.m. ET

Banks that operate inside Wal-Marts reap among the highest fees from customers of any banks in the nation, according to a WSJ analysis. Mark Maremont reports. Photo: Getty.

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Do You Know What’s Going in Your Amazon Shopping Cart? For Faster Shipping, Items Are Commingled at Warehouses, Opening the Door to Knockoffs

Do You Know What’s Going in Your Amazon Shopping Cart?

For Faster Shipping, Items Are Commingled at Warehouses, Opening the Door to Knockoffs

SERENA NG and GREG BENSINGER

Updated May 11, 2014 8:31 p.m. ET

Every now and then Matthew Frank, whose company makes Tovolo-brand ice-cube molds and trays, will slow down shipments of his kitchenware to Amazon.comInc. AMZN +2.66% and then conduct test buys as the Internet retailer’s stock runs low. Read more of this post

Going to Market in Developing Economies: Winning Big by Targeting Small

Going to Market in Developing Economies: Winning Big by Targeting Small

by Samir Agrawal, Shiv Choudhury, Ghirish Pokardas, Vaishali Rastogi, and Ravi Srivastava

APRIL 23, 2014

This article is part of a series on how companies can transform their “go to market” approach in emerging economies. Earlier articles focused on excellence in consumer insight, channel management, and in-store execution. Read more of this post

Making better decisions about the risks of capital projects; A handful of pragmatic tools can help managers decide which projects best fit their portfolio and risk tolerance

Making better decisions about the risks of capital projects

A handful of pragmatic tools can help managers decide which projects best fit their portfolio and risk tolerance.

May 2014 | byMartin Pergler and Anders Rasmussen

Never is the fear factor higher for managers than when they are making strategic investment decisions on multibillion-dollar capital projects. With such high stakes, we’ve seen many managers prepare elaborate financial models to justify potential projects. But when it comes down to the final decision, especially when hard choices need to be made among multiple opportunities, they resort to less rigorous means—arbitrarily discounting estimates of expected returns, for example, or applying overly broad risk premiums. Read more of this post

Investing Process – Ownership Concentration and Corporate Control in Chinese Listed Companies

Ownership Concentration and Corporate Control in Chinese Listed Companies

Wenge Wang 

University of Auckland – Faculty of Law
January 27, 2014
Wenge Wang, Ownership Concentration and Corporate Control in Chinese Listed Companies, 11 (1) US-China Law Review, 57-93 (2014)

Abstract: 
This paper investigates the ownership concentration and corporate control of Chinese listed companies in the period of 2003-2011. The purpose is to examine the practical effect of the share structure split reform in 2005 and explore the actual outcome of the reduction of state shares of Chinese listed companies. Specifically, ownership structure, shareholding concentration, shareholder identification and corporate control pattern are identified to serve for this purpose.

Read more of this post

The John Malone Complex – A Study in Financial Brilliance

The John Malone Complex – A Study in Financial Brilliance

by VW StaffMay 10, 2014, 10:26 pm

This is an excellent white paper on John Malone by Denali Investors (a great value oriented hedge fund, run by Kevin Byun). Also see Cable Cowboy: John Malone and the Rise of the Modern Cable BusinessThe Billionaire Shell Game: How Cable Baron John Malone and Assorted Corporate Titans Invented a Future Nobody Wanted, and The Outsiders: Eight Unconventional CEOs and Their Radically Rational Blueprint for Success Read more of this post

A Q.&A. With the Author of a Buffett-Praised Book on 3G Capital

A Q.&A. With the Author of a Buffett-Praised Book on 3G Capital

Warren Buffet’s $23 billion deal to buy H.J. Heinz was promoted at the exhibition hall of the Berkshire meeting.

RICK WILKING / REUTERS

By MICHAEL J. DE LA MERCED

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There Are More Billionaires In Moscow Than In New York, But London Has The Most

There Are More Billionaires In Moscow Than In New York, But London Has The Most

Tyler Durden on 05/11/2014 16:41 -0400

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Old and Fired at IBM: Tech Trendsetter Changes the Game, Guards Age Data

Old and Fired at IBM: Tech Trendsetter Changes the Game, Guards Age Data

By Alex Barinka – May 12, 2014

For at least a decade, International Business Machines Corp. (IBM) gave fired employees information detailing a severance package that asked them to waive age-discrimination claims and also included a page listing the job titles and ages of workers being let go. Read more of this post

As China e-commerce basks in Alibaba IPO glow, aging warehouses lure investors

As China e-commerce basks in Alibaba IPO glow, aging warehouses lure investors

Sun, May 11 2014

By Stephen Aldred and Clare Jim

HONG KONG (Reuters) – Alibaba Group Holding Ltd’s plans for a giant initial public offering in New York highlight vast potential for e-commerce in China – and the weak link the logistics industry must fix if explosive growth projections are to be reached. Read more of this post

How ‘Big Corn’ lost the ethanol battle to Philadelphia refiners

How ‘Big Corn’ lost the ethanol battle to Philadelphia refiners

1:43am EDT

By Cezary Podkul and Jeff Mason

NEW YORK/WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Six months ago the U.S. oil industry scored a surprise win against farm groups when the Obama administration proposed slashing the amount of ethanol refiners must blend into gasoline, a move that could save them billions of dollars. Read more of this post

To sleep, perchance to control your dreams

To sleep, perchance to control your dreams

Sun, May 11 2014

By Sharon Begley

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Nighttime dreams in which you show up at work naked, encounter an ax-wielding psychopath or experience other tribulations may become a thing of the past thanks to a discovery reported on Sunday. Read more of this post

A Memoir From the Eye of a Financial Storm: In ‘Stress Test,’ Timothy F. Geithner Recalls Crisis Days

A Memoir From the Eye of a Financial Storm

In ‘Stress Test,’ Timothy F. Geithner Recalls Crisis Days

MAY 11, 2014

One afternoon in the summer of 2008, as the financial system was careening toward the abyss that would send the United States into the worst economic emergency  since the Great DepressionTimothy F. Geithner — then president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and later, President Obama’sTreasury secretary — tried to lighten the mood in his office with “an impromptu contest for the best metaphor for what was happening.” Read more of this post

Digital Music Service to Pose New Challenge to Subscription Model

Digital Music Service to Pose New Challenge to Subscription Model

By BEN SISARIOMAY 11, 2014

Adam Kidron, left, chief executive of Yonder, a music downloading service that will begin operating Monday, and Jim Heindlmeyer, chief operating officer, at their Manhattan offices. Read more of this post

Life in China: Embrace the Mystery; Former New Yorker China Correspondent Evan Osnos Reflects on His Years There

Life in China: Embrace the Mystery

Former New Yorker China Correspondent Evan Osnos Reflects on His Years There

TE-PING CHEN

May 8, 2014 1:57 a.m. ET

Former China correspondent Evan Osnos is sure of one thing: The degree of confidence a person has about forecasting the future of the Middle Kingdom usually varies in inverse proportion to the amount of time spent there. Read more of this post

Trouble at the Top: Chinese officialdom is in turmoil

Trouble at the Top: Chinese officialdom is in turmoil.

Abram N. Shulsky and Gary Schmitt

May 19, 2014, Vol. 19, No. 34

In little over a year, close to 60 Chinese officials have died of unnatural causes, with most being suicides. The strong suspicion is that this epidemic of mysterious deaths among China’s elite is likely tied to the anticorruption campaign being led by Chinese president and party general secretary Xi Jinping. Read more of this post